Archive for March 7th, 2010
Desperate Condo, Homeowner Groups Given New Way to Grab Overdue Fees
Desperate Condo, Homeowner Groups Given New Way to Grab Overdue Fees
A new maneuver called reverse foreclosure helps condo and homeowner associations collect badly needed overdue maintenance fees.
BY RACHAEL LEE COLEMAN
rcoleman@MiamiHerald.com
Revenue-starved condominium and homeowners associations struggling to keep the taps running and the lawns mowed have found a novel way to squeeze money from units that don’t pay what they owe.
It’s called a reverse foreclosure, a tool that can force banks to pay association maintenance fees when unit owners don’t.
It’s a way for associations to halt the decline that begins when one owner quits paying maintenance fees, followed by another, then another, forcing a reduction in general maintenance, driving down property values even more, and leaving a community riddled with vacancies and vandalism.
Also, it’s a way for associations to stick it to banks — who they are convinced have been sticking it to them since the real estate meltdown began.
Banks, for their part, deny any dishonorable intent and say they are just protecting their interests, as any prudent business would do.
Here’s how a reverse foreclosure works: When a home or condominium owner stops paying the mortgage, the bank files a notice of foreclosure to safeguard its stake. After that, some banks deliberately delay the process of taking back the property.
They take their time because, if it’s like most South Florida properties, the delinquent unit is worth less than the outstanding mortgage. In the lingo of the trade, such units are “upside-down.”
Banks are in no rush to have upside-down properties on their books.
Delaying foreclosure can be a nightmare for homeowner and condo associations. When people stop paying the mortgage, they invariably stop paying their maintenance fees. As long as a foreclosure is in limbo — and the process can take years if a bank wants to slow things down, associations say — unpaid maintenance fees pile up.
Under a reverse foreclosure, the association files its own foreclosure notice and takes title, which is its right after the homeowner stops paying maintenance fees. The association can’t sell because of the bank’s lien. But it can renounce its claim on the property in court and ask the judge to give the title back to the bank.
Then the bank has to pay the fees.
It’s a hardball tactic, but condo and homeowner associations say they have been forced to resort to it because the Legislature, beholden to lenders and their lobbyists, refuses to make the banks take over the units and cover the unpaid bills.
Although reverse foreclosure is a new concept, it could become very popular very quickly. In a recent survey, 60 percent of Florida condo and homeowner associations reported that half of their units were two months behind in paying maintenance fees.
When unpaid fees become an epidemic, associations sometimes have to charge “special assessments” to owners in good standing to make up for lost revenue and cover the cost of utilities, upkeep and insurance.
Special assessments cause fierce neighbor-vs.-neighbor resentment, and can trigger a domino effect — even more units sliding into default.
“These legal strategies are a direct response to the fact that the laws haven’t changed,” said Ben Solomon, an attorney with Association Law Group. In January, he engineered the state’s first reverse foreclosure, on behalf of Keys Gate, a master-planned community in Homestead.
Although a reverse foreclosure sticks a bank with a property it doesn’t want, Florida law gives the lender a break on the outstanding bill. Under existing statutes, banks cannot be forced to pay more than 12 months of past-due homeowner association fees or 1 percent of the overall mortgage amount, whichever is less. In the case of condos, the cap is six months.
The remainder, tens of thousands of dollars in some instances, is written off as bad debt by the association.
Because of the cap, said Solomon, “there is no incentive for banks to foreclose” in a timely fashion.
The Keys Gate Community Association, which represents 3,100 families, foreclosed on a four-bedroom home in April 2007 after its owner stopped paying monthly maintenance fees. The lender, HSBC Bank USA, filed its own notice to foreclose two months later, but didn’t follow through, sticking the association with an empty house and, ultimately, $5,320 in unpaid fees tallied over two and a half years.
Fed up, the association cooked up the reverse foreclosure gambit.
On Jan. 12, Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Jerald Bagley bestowed his blessing, making the bank liable not only for association fees, but legal fees, court costs and taxes.
Because of the cap, the association had to eat $3,819 of the $5,320 tab.
HSBC’s attorneys did not return calls for comment.
Keys Gate is now moving to reverse foreclose on 13 other delinquent homes.
Howard Lax, a Bloomfield Hills, Mich., attorney who represents banks, mortgage companies and real estate brokers, said it is understandable that lenders are in no hurry to take back delinquent units, only to have to turn around and sell them amid a market that has crashed.
“If the bank can’t sell what they already have on the market, it makes little sense to put more on the market,” he said.
Added Alex Sanchez, president and CEO of the Florida Bankers Association: “We get hit from every side. Some people say we’re foreclosing too fast; others say we’re foreclosing too slow. Bankers want to keep Florida families in their homes. Foreclosure is a last remedy.”
In the meantime, Donna Berger, managing partner of the firm Katzman, Garfinkel, Rosenbaum and executive director of the Community Advocacy Network, recommends that associations recoup their losses by renting out units they take by foreclosure.
“If you already own it, control it,” Berger said. “You don’t need to pay lawyers.”
Miami Beach City Commissioner Jerry Libbin, who is fighting for legislation that strips away the banks’ protections, called the court decree in the Keys Gate case “an important legal ruling for condo owners who are saddled with huge special assessments because greedy banks refused to take financial responsibility for their reckless lending.”
A number of new bills proposed for this legislative session could, in fact, offer associations some relief. One would turn the six-month cap on condo back-payments into a 12-month cap. Another would wipe out caps entirely.
“In the meantime, we’re trying to aggressively work within existing laws,” said Solomon. “There’s no time to spare and we can’t afford to wait.”
The Swaps That Swallowed Your Town
The Swaps That Swallowed Your Town
By Gretchen Morgenson
AS more details surface about how derivatives helped Greece and perhaps other countries mask their debt loads, let’s not forget that the wonders of these complex products aren’t on display only overseas. Across our very own country, municipalities, school districts, sewer systems and other tax-exempt debt issuers are ensnared in the derivatives mess.
Like the credit default swaps that hid Greece’s obligations, the instruments weighing on our municipalities were brought to us by the creative minds of Wall Street. The rocket scientists crafting the products got backup from swap advisers, a group of conflicted promoters who consulted municipalities and other issuers. Both of these camps peddled swaps as a way for tax-exempt debt issuers to reduce their financing costs.
Now, however, the promised benefits of these swaps have mutated into enormous, and sometimes smothering, expenses. Making matters worse, issuers who want out of the arrangements — swap contracts typically run for 30 years — must pay up in order to escape.
That’s right. Issuers are essentially paying twice for flawed deals that bestowed great riches on the bankers and advisers who sold them. Taxpayers should be outraged, but to be angry you have to be informed — and few taxpayers may even know that the complicated arrangements exist.
Here’s how municipal swaps worked (in theory): Say an issuer needed to raise money and prevailing rates for fixed-rate debt were 5 percent. A swap allowed issuers to reduce the interest rate they paid on their debt to, say, 4.5 percent, while still paying what was effectively a fixed rate.
Nothing wrong with that, right?
Sales presentations for these instruments, no surprise, accentuated the positives in them. “Derivative products are unique in the history of financial innovation,” gushed a pitch from Citigroup in November 2007 about a deal entered into by the Florida Keys Aqueduct Authority. Another selling point: “Swaps have become widely accepted by the rating agencies as an appropriate financial tool.” And, the presentation said, they can be easily unwound (for a fee, of course).
But these arrangements were riddled with risks, as issuers are finding out. The swaps were structured to generate a stream of income to the issuer — like your hometown — that was tethered to a variable interest rate. Variable rates can rise or fall wildly if economic circumstances change. Banks that executed the swaps received fixed payments from the issuers.
The contracts, however, assumed that economic and financial circumstances would be relatively stable and that interest rates used in the deals would stay in a narrow range. The exact opposite occurred: the financial system went into a tailspin two years ago, and rates plummeted. The auction-rate securities market, used by issuers to set their interest payments to bondholders, froze up. As a result, these rates rose.
For municipalities, that meant they were stuck with contracts that forced them to pay out a much higher interest rate than they were receiving in return. Sure, the rate plunge was unforeseen, but it was not an impossibility. And the impact of such a possible decline was rarely highlighted in sales presentations, municipal experts say.
Another aspect to these swaps’ designs made them especially ill-suited for municipal issuers. Almost all tax-exempt debt is structured so that after 10 years, it can be called or retired by the city, school district or highway authority that floated it. But by locking in the swap for 30 years, the municipality or school district is essentially giving up the option to call its debt and issue lower-cost bonds, without penalty, if interest rates have declined.
Imagine a homeowner who has a mortgage allowing her to refinance without a penalty if interest rates drop, as many do. Then she inexplicably agrees to give up that opportunity and not be compensated for doing so. Well, some towns did exactly that when they signed derivatives contracts that locked them in for 30 years.
Then there are the counterparty risks associated with municipal swaps. If the banks in the midst of these deals falter, the municipality is at peril, because getting out of a contract with a failed bank is also costly. For example, closing out swaps in which Lehman Brothers was the counterparty cost various New York State debt issuers $12 million, according to state filings.
Termination fees also kick in when a municipal issuer wants out of its swap agreement. They can be significant.
New York State provides a good example. An Oct. 30, 2009, filing describing its swaps shows that for the most recent fiscal year, April 2008 to March 2009, the state paid $103 million to terminate roughly $2 billion worth of swaps — more than a quarter of which resulted from the Lehman bankruptcy in September 2008.
(You can find this report online at bit.ly/cS8ZFV.)
As of Nov. 30, 2009, New York had $3.74 billion worth of swaps outstanding. Even so, New York doesn’t have as much of a problem with swaps as other jurisdictions. Still, New York could have spent that $103 million on many other things that the state needs.
The prime example, of course, of a swap-imperiled issuer is Jefferson County, Ala. Its swaps were supposed to lower the county’s costs, but instead they wound up increasing its indebtedness. Groaning under a $3 billion debt load, the county is facing the possibility of bankruptcy.
Critics of swaps hope that increased taxpayer awareness of these souring deals will force municipalities to think twice. “When municipalities enter into these swaps they end up paying more and receiving much less,” said Andy Kalotay, an expert in fixed income.
Why is that? One reason, Mr. Kalotay said, is the use of swap advisers.
“The basic problem is the swap adviser gets paid only if there is a transaction — an unbelievable conflict of interest,” he said. “It’s the adviser who is supposed to protect you, but the swap adviser has a vested interest in seeing something happen.”
WHAT is especially maddening to many in the municipal securities market is that issuers are now relying on the same investment banks that put them into swaps-embedded debt to restructure their obligations. According to those who travel this world, issuers are afraid to upset their relationships with their bankers and are not holding them accountable for placing them in these costly trades.
“We need transparency where Wall Street discloses not only the risks but also calculates the potential costs associated with those risks,” said Joseph Fichera, chief executive at Saber Partners, an advisory firm. “If you just ask issuers to disclose, even in a footnote, the maximum possible loss or gain from the swap they probably wouldn’t do it. And if they did that, then investors and taxpayers would know what the risks are, in plain English.”
Mr. Fichera is right. At this intersection of two huge and extremely opaque arenas — the municipal debt market and derivatives trading — sunlight is sorely needed.







